1 / 22

NWS Headquarters August 10, 2011

CBRFC Decision Support for Colorado River Water Management. NWS Headquarters August 10, 2011. Kevin Werner NWS Colorado Basin River Forecast Center. Outline. Colorado River Primer CBRFC Climate Services Gap and Chasms. Why the Colorado River Stopped Flowing

madge
Download Presentation

NWS Headquarters August 10, 2011

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CBRFC Decision Support for Colorado River Water Management NWS HeadquartersAugust 10, 2011 Kevin Werner NWS Colorado Basin River Forecast Center

  2. Outline • Colorado River Primer • CBRFC Climate Services • Gap and Chasms

  3. Why the Colorado River Stopped Flowing -All Things Considered, July 14, 2011

  4. Colorado River • 25 million people rely on Colorado River water • 3.5 million acres of irrigation • 85% of runoff comes from above 9000 feet • Mean annual discharge is about 12.4 MAF • Storage capacity is about 60 MAF (4 times mean annual flow) • River is fully used and little flows to ocean

  5. Colorado River Allocation • Colorado Compact (1922) divided water between the upper basin and lower basin – 7.5 MAF each • Mexican Water Treaty (1944) allocated Mexico 1.5 MAF • Arizona v. California (1964) allocated water among lower basin states • Interim Guidelines (2007) specify shortages and surpluses through 2026 that are tied to forecasts • Key facts: • River is over-allocated: original allocation (16.5 MAF) was based on a series of wet years. Actual average flow is 12.4 MAF • Lower basin states (AZ, CA, NV) use full 7.5 MAF each year • Mexico uses its full 1.5 MAF • Upper basin states (CO, WY, UT, NM) are still “developing” their 7.5 MAF • No shortage has ever been declared on the river • Shortages would affect lower basin states first (and AZ first of all)

  6. Long Term Supply / Demand

  7. Colorado River Allocation Colorado Compact (1922) divided water between the upper basin and lower basin – 7.5 MAF each Mexican Water Treaty (1944) allocated Mexico 1.5 MAF Arizona v. California (1964) allocated water among lower basin states Interim Guidelines (2007) specify shortages and surpluses through 2026 that are tied to forecasts Key facts: River is over-allocated: original allocation (16.5 MAF) was based on a series of wet years. Actual average flow is 12.4 MAF Lower basin states (AZ, CA, NV) use full 7.5 MAF each year Mexico uses its full 1.5 MAF Upper basin states (CO, WY, UT, NM) are still “developing” their 7.5 MAF No shortage has ever been declared on the river Shortages would affect lower basin states first (and AZ first of all)

  8. Interim Operating Guidelines • Guidelines specify how shortages and surpluses will be distributed among the basin states • USBR directed to operate reservoirs based, to a large extent, on CBRFC/NRCS official forecasts • Most years 8.23 MAF released from Lake Powell to Lake Mead • In wet years when Lake Mead is low (such as 2011), “extra” water can be released. This is called equalization and/or balancing. • “Most probable” release schedule based on CBRFC/NRCS April 1 forecast is 11.63 MAF 14.7 MAF 3,629 1/1/2011 Projection 10.3 MAF 1,086 1/1/2011 Projection

  9. Value • Damage from 1/10 AZ storm: $11ma • Damage from 6/10 UT flooding: $6.5ma • Damage from 12/10 UT/NV storm: $35ma • Damage from spring 2011 UT/CO/WY flooding: <$200m • Colorado River average runoff: 12.4 MAF • Replacement value of $330/AF -> $4bb • **Economic value of water resources far greater than flooding damages • Sources: • a: WFO, FEMA (via stormdata); b: MWD (via Hasencamp, private communication

  10. Water Supply Decision Support The past The future • Efforts in parallel -- • CBRFC working to improve probabilistic flow forecasts • BOR working to implement probabilistic water management model

  11. Past CBRFC Methods • Official forecasts coordinated each month with NRCS/NWCC • Skill primarily from accumulating snow pack • Updated monthly or semi-monthly • Probabilistic but not ensemble based • Not repeatable • Subjective • Forecaster Role: • Monitor forecast process and system • Add judgement to forecast process

  12. Future CBRFC Methods • Objective, repeatable ensemble forecasts • Integrate skill from weather and climate predications • Tailor to stakeholder thresholds and concerns • Forecaster role: • Monitor forecast process and system • Apply judgement (less frequently?) • Decision support • Work to improve forecast system and processes based on objective standards • Follow best practices identified by CPC

  13. http://wateroutlook.nwrfc.noaa.gov/

  14. Core Partner: USBR • Mission: “manage, develop, and protect water and related resources in an environmentally and economically sound manner in the interest of the American public” • Operates major water projects in 17 western states • CBRFC works with 2 of 5 USBR regions (Lower and Upper Colorado)

  15. Past USBR Methods • Upper and Lower Colorado Regions operate reservoirs based on the 24 month study • 24 month study: • Updated monthly • Extends out 24 months • Specifies reservoir releases and target levels • Single value output (except Aug, Jan, Apr when it has reasonable min and reasonable max) • Labor intensive and subjective

  16. Future USBR Method • Mid-Term Probabilistic Model: • Uses CBRFC ensemble forecasts for first two years • Uses “rules” (prioritized logic) to determine releases • Output will be ensemble forecast for reservoir operations • Currently undergoing testing • Expected deployment by WY2012

  17. Barriers, Gaps, Chasms

  18. Common Stakeholder Requirements • More frequent updates of our long lead products • More analysis - often involving climate science plus water resources • More metadata and data about our forecast process: • raw model forecasts • snow distribution • model forcing information • Longer lead forecasts - even with minimal skill

  19. Institutional Barriers • NWS largely unaware of current water supply climate services and the challenges in addressing stakeholder requirements • No metrics for measuring water supply / resources forecasts • No mechanism for connecting needed climate science to water resources modeling • No method for collecting stakeholder requirements – especially those difficult to meet • NOAA and NWS personnel resources dispersed and often disconnected • NWS Service Hydrologists disconnected from RFC • NOAA and NWS climate science and services efforts unaware of existing RFC climate services and needs • RFC staffing profile designed around NWS flood forecasting mission – not climate services

  20. Service Gaps &Science Challenges • Skillful seasonal forecast for Upper Colorado (minimal ENSO signal) • 2-5 year forecasts • Water Demand / ET forecasts • Probabilistic streamflow forecasts across time scales • Dust on snow • Beetle kill • Connecting forecasts and science to stakeholder decisions

  21. Chasm Colorado River water resources stakeholders Mission: To understand and predict changes in the Earth’s environment … to meet our Nation’s economic, social, and environmental needs

  22. Questions? Kevin Werner CBRFC Service Coordination Hydrologist Phone: 801.524.5130 Email: kevin.werner@noaa.gov

More Related